Changing up or banking coins
- trayhop123
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- Been-Grant-Mitchell'd!
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Or load up the drawer, press the 'notes' button and then wait for two and a half months to get your money when the poxy thing fucks up.Scott wrote:Theres a coin changing machine in the services, you open a door, load it up with coins, close the door, wait for the green light, press the button and out come the notes, no charge either.
Oxford services by the way.
- Been-Grant-Mitchell'd!
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I had my Llloyds account closed for banking coins. Anyone paying in decent amounts should spread between multiple accounts to avoid this happening to them. A colleague had the same thing happen to him. Very disconcerting. They can close when they like and without justification.JG wrote:Never had problems with paying coins in to Lloyds, bar the odd passing comment and one over enthusiastic junior manager who was rather keen to ensure I was not using the money in laundrettes. They had the Gaul to charge me £40 for a glitch in their on line banking system, but all branches I have used take coins. That one in Leicester must be an exception. They also try to sell their annoying financial products over the counter. Same as any bank I guess.
Is sphinx a pyramid clone rob? I've still got two pyramids rob. Not including the one probably in mr. Ps.
Tasty 280 loss on a 332 yesterday btw. JG luck. No TSLs in Minehead afaik, unless that classic slot is a TSL? In which case no wonder he was rude. Last time I was there £5 eastenders nudged in gold 7s for Jpot. Made £8 on it. They were very polite and happily changed it into £1 notes for me.
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- betchrider
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- thecannonball89
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I've found Barclays and Lloyds like to ask questions and get busy sometimes if you bring too many coins in. They also like to give a forever varying (depending on who's serving you) limit on the amount of bags you're allowed to pay in.
Lots of Metrobanks popping up around here now. They all have a coin machine which you can feed a monkey or a grand into without belonging to the bank, although they're getting a bit hot about it in some branches.
Two guys I know were running a nightspot near me 2-3 years ago, they used to take £500+ coins off me weekly and also gave me cheap bottles and queue jumps as thanks for the service. That was a great situation to be in but they run somewhere in central now so I can't really do it anymore. So if you know anyone in that game you should get on to them.
Also if you shop in a supermarket with self service checkouts you can pay for your shopping in coins then cancel and it'll spit notes back out, then repeat/pay for it with coins eventually. Works on Sainsburys and Tesco units for sure, haven't tried others but I'm sure they'll work.
I know it can be a nightmare living in a pound coin world sometimes and I always try my best to get rid of as many coins as possible, but there are a few advantages to feeding that pound coin monster in the corner of the room.
A) £20,000 in pound coins is a lot harder to spend than £20,000 cash. The difficulty when it comes to spending a large sum of coins means the £20,000 coins would only ever be going down very slowly.
B) Some random crackhead or jealous thief tries to rob your home and the £20,000 cash is easily shoved in the loot bag, unlike the £20,000 coins which won't fit in the loot bag and will be a nightmare to carry and get away with.
C) The Police decide to take your front door off at the crack of dawn and search your premises. They find £20,000 cash shoved in a drawer next to your small personal drug stash. They instantly conclude the money has come from drug dealing and your small personal stash was all that remained of your huge shipment. Your "cover story" of being a professional fruit player seems laughable in a courtroom compared to the Police's obvious logic. It's a completely different story if they find £20,000 coins, your story rings true and hopefully the Police see it to be too much effort to create an alternate criminal way in which you acquired the coins.
So there are some benefits to keeping a pile of coins at home, although if you plan to transcend the fruit machine world for a better life the majority of your savings will always have to be in the bank unfortunately. Nice to have a stack of coins to fall back on in an emergency though, especially if you don't trust the banks/police/thieves or like having money around that you can't/won't spend.
Lots of Metrobanks popping up around here now. They all have a coin machine which you can feed a monkey or a grand into without belonging to the bank, although they're getting a bit hot about it in some branches.
Two guys I know were running a nightspot near me 2-3 years ago, they used to take £500+ coins off me weekly and also gave me cheap bottles and queue jumps as thanks for the service. That was a great situation to be in but they run somewhere in central now so I can't really do it anymore. So if you know anyone in that game you should get on to them.
Also if you shop in a supermarket with self service checkouts you can pay for your shopping in coins then cancel and it'll spit notes back out, then repeat/pay for it with coins eventually. Works on Sainsburys and Tesco units for sure, haven't tried others but I'm sure they'll work.
I know it can be a nightmare living in a pound coin world sometimes and I always try my best to get rid of as many coins as possible, but there are a few advantages to feeding that pound coin monster in the corner of the room.
A) £20,000 in pound coins is a lot harder to spend than £20,000 cash. The difficulty when it comes to spending a large sum of coins means the £20,000 coins would only ever be going down very slowly.
B) Some random crackhead or jealous thief tries to rob your home and the £20,000 cash is easily shoved in the loot bag, unlike the £20,000 coins which won't fit in the loot bag and will be a nightmare to carry and get away with.
C) The Police decide to take your front door off at the crack of dawn and search your premises. They find £20,000 cash shoved in a drawer next to your small personal drug stash. They instantly conclude the money has come from drug dealing and your small personal stash was all that remained of your huge shipment. Your "cover story" of being a professional fruit player seems laughable in a courtroom compared to the Police's obvious logic. It's a completely different story if they find £20,000 coins, your story rings true and hopefully the Police see it to be too much effort to create an alternate criminal way in which you acquired the coins.
So there are some benefits to keeping a pile of coins at home, although if you plan to transcend the fruit machine world for a better life the majority of your savings will always have to be in the bank unfortunately. Nice to have a stack of coins to fall back on in an emergency though, especially if you don't trust the banks/police/thieves or like having money around that you can't/won't spend.
Iv been out put a full shift in today. I changed coins up in every pub even if the fruit wasn't ready or I lost on it. I also come across a Mecca draw pound change machine. Must off changed up at least 700 throughout the day obviously I made no were close to that but it's all getting banked tomorrow hastle free. Got car insurance tax ( that I'll pay in coins ) and I need a tyre. Cars are not the cheapest these days.
- betchrider
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